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Twitter Nation Has Arrived: How Scared Should We Be?

By Alexander Zaitchik, AlterNet. Posted February 21, 2009.


Can it be long before the entire country is tweeting away in the din of a giant turd-covered silicon aviary?
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Welcome to Twitter Nation. What was once an easily avoided subculture of needy and annoying online souls is now a growing part of the social and media landscapes, with Twittering tentacles reaching into the operations of major newspapers, networks, corporations and political campaigns. 

Suddenly, our skies are dark with brightly colored cartoon birds. As in a nightmare, they are everywhere.

This has all happened very fast. It was less than three years ago that Twitter hatched as a harmless Web 2.0 curio modeled on Facebook's status-update feature. Twitter offered people a forum devoted exclusively to short blog entries known as "tweets," most of which answer the company's tagline question, "What are you doing now?"

By mid-2008, the San Francisco-based site was garnering feature coverage in national magazines and batting away $500 million buyout offers. With nearly six million users and counting, it is now on a Plaguelike pace to obliterate last year's growth clip of 900 percent. Twitter is growing so fast that 2009 may come to be known not as the year America swore in its first black president or nationalized the banks, but the year America learned to think and communicate in 140 characters or fewer.

Over the last several months, the bird has flown the coop and begun flitting madly through the wider culture. For some, the breakout came with the site's role during the Mumbai terror attacks in November. For others, it was the Dalai Lama's decision to start Twittering. Some might point to Twitter feeds featured on cable news, or the dozens of Fortune 500 companies now Twittering their way to better sales and mitigated PR disasters. But there's no debating that a tipping point has been reached. Use of the site is now mainstream standard practice for everyone from national politicians to editors at highbrow publications like Harper's. Sites are popping up that discuss music and economics using the Twitter formula and size. Not a week passes without another creepily overeager New York Times trends piece about the site. Earlier this month, a Twitter style guide was released, and the first national Twitter awards ceremony, known as the Shorties, was convened in New York. Hosted by Twitter's own Walter Cronkite, CNN's Rick Sanchez, the awards ceremony featured acceptance speeches limited to 140 characters.

Can it be long before the entire country is tweeting away in the din of a giant turd-covered silicon aviary? And how scared should we be?

There is evolutionary logic to the building Twitter surge. The progression has been steady from blogs to RSS feeds to Facebook. But Twitter brings us within sight of an apotheosis of those aspects of American culture that have become all too familiar in recent years: look-at-me adolescent neediness, constant-contact media addiction, birdlike attention-span compression and vapidity to the point of depravity. When 140 characters is the ascendant standard size for communication and debate, what comes next? Seventy characters? Twenty? The disappearance of words altogether, replaced by smiley-face and cranky-crab emoticons?

I am a veteran Twitter hater—a "twater" in the cutesy Twitter mode. People like me have shadowed the site since it was still crying blind in the nest. As early as 2007, tech blogger Robert Scoble called Twitter hate "the new black." The first wave of Twitter hatred tended to be visceral and knee-jerk, a reaction to the site's unique ability to make everyone using it sound annoying and pathetic.

How can you not hate a site that encourages people to post, "At the park -- I love squirrels!" and "F@*K! I forgot to tivo Lost last night." How can you not want to slap these people with a mackerel? It's no coincidence that the second-most Twitter-happy people on Earth are the Japanese, the undisputed champions of self-infantilization. Twitter provides the closest thing most people will ever get to their very own paparazzi or reality show, a trail of imagined eyes on their every move, thought and taste.

The old Twitter hatred now feels quaint. Before, the site and its users were simply annoying. Now there is serious talk about "Twitter Journalism" and "Twitter Criticism." What was once just a colorful special-needs classroom on the Internet is starting to look like a steel spike aimed at the heart of what remains of our ability to construct and process grammatical sentences and complete thoughts.

Twitter's defenders roll their eyes at such criticisms. People have been saying this about the Internet for years, they say. You're just a grumpy old snob, they say. (It's true that at 34 I am old by social-networking standards, three years older than the average Twitter user. But nothing reveals age more than being terrified of being thought old, a fear that is obviously driving so much uncritical Twitter coverage.)


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Alexander Zaitchik is a freelance journalist.

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Much ado about nearly nothing...
Posted by: gazooks on Feb 21, 2009 1:16 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In the hierarchy of threats, this seems more than a bit overstated. The hula hoop was considered a useless, mindless, mass threat by some as is nearly everything that achieves fad status.

Is it startling that so many lives are dominated in a schoolgirl continuum of the trivial and mundane, and hasn't that always been the case?

People need connection and this seems to enable an expression of what moves them on a basic level.

Maybe schoolgirls twit farting is bringing us down because we're not trying hard enough to find something of real importance to write about.

This could have made decent parody, in the right hands.

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» RE: ADD communication Posted by: Sushi
» RE: Much ado about nearly nothing... Posted by: blackie4aces
» RE: Much ado about nearly nothing... Posted by: johnnyfarout
Twitter is kind of useful on good days
Posted by: shellius on Feb 21, 2009 1:26 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Great points. I often hate Twitter and mostly find it's a distraction and waste of time -- but -- it's a good way to get people to visit my website. SEO doesn't work anymore and with billions of websites clamoring for attention, for a little while, Twitter is a good advertising platform. It won't be for long, but it is right now. That's all it is though. As a communications device it's annoying and mostly asks me to follow links. As an announcement board it's borderline useless because the messages go out of sight too fast, and being "followed" feels like being stalked or collected like an insect. How many people to follow is too many? Probably, 100 is too many, but some people have tens of thousands. Crazyness.

Still, Twitter is probably the most useful of the annoying things jumping up and down for my attention. I'm also quite positive I'm not using the way I'm "supposed" to. It also feels like a giant black hole I'm about to fall in and I really don't want to do that.

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stupid
Posted by: cyr3n on Feb 21, 2009 1:31 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If you're getting banal tweets and its driving you nuts, stop following banal people!

I use twitter as a quick way to scan news blogs and post important news (ie: mmorpg events, contests, in-person gatherings). No problems here. Twitter is a very useful tool and shouldnt be overlooked by anyone trying to leverage the social networking phenomenon.

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garbage
Posted by: cordas on Feb 21, 2009 2:25 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Twitter is almost the inverse of narcissism. It's practically collectivist -- you're creating a shared understanding larger than yourself."

Twitting is about as closely related to narcissism as the far left is to the far right... The differences are so small but all important to those who want to believe, to everyone else they are for all intents and purposes identical.

The US and Japan aren't the only countries that are being overtaken by this craptastic site, we here in the UK seem to be drowning in a sea of twits and their pointless droppings. It is also rapidly starting to take over our media as well, in the last few days I have seen 3 items on BBC News 24, and half a dozen articles on the BBC homepage all spouting how great twitter is, and how its going to change the face of news and society forever.

Having had limited experience of twitter myself I find it hard to understand the draw. I signed up for about 3 weeks at the insistance of my gf, but then the site had to go as I felt I could feel my braincells dying from the overload of irrelevant, banal and sometimes sickening twits it was being fed. I can understand the attraction of keeping tabs on some people who post well, but its like trying to find needles in a sewer.

Must check my bible to see if twitting is one of the signs of the appocolypse, because I am sure it must be.

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Same people
Posted by: Perry Logan on Feb 21, 2009 3:25 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
These must be the same people who think "South Park" is brilliant.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» South Park is brilliant Posted by: SeattlePackedSnowandCollidedCars
» RE: South Park is brilliant Posted by: AMERICAN VETERAN
» RE: Well, you need to be stoned to appreciate South Park Posted by: Fat Man at the Buffet Line
» RE: Same people Posted by: froggeymonkey
Privacy is golden
Posted by: HANGTRAITORS on Feb 21, 2009 3:38 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
These stupid Facebook sites are a form of intelligence gathering set up by intelligence agencies... any thing you post or say can and will be used against you in a FEMA court of Law!!!! Privacy and anonymity are priceless.

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» RE: Privacy is golden Posted by: stopthemaddness2
» RE: Privacy is golden Posted by: shanaza
» Let me guess... Posted by: bizeeb
» RE: Privacy is golden Posted by: praedor
thanks
Posted by: watergrl69 on Feb 21, 2009 3:40 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You have saved me from wasting any time on checking out this fad. I am now convinced that I wouldn't want to spend more than 5 seconds on Twitter--ever.

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» RE: thanks Posted by: Violetw
» RE: thanks Posted by: phatkhat
Wow...
Posted by: Sheamus on Feb 21, 2009 3:41 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
... three pages of saying that Twitter is 'for morons', followed by a request to sign up to alternet's Twitter feed. Somebody have a quiet word with the editor, eh?

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» RE: Wow... Posted by: Beck
» RE: Wow...(Wow..Indeed!) Posted by: BigElectricCat
» Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha Posted by: jreal
Stop dissing Japanese schoolgirls
Posted by: Teller on Feb 21, 2009 3:49 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Further evidence that 50s sci fi movies were documentaries.

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Yet another silly "The Internet is the end of civilization" article
Posted by: jmilles on Feb 21, 2009 4:31 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Here we go again. The pattern is familiar: The New York Times publishes a pretentious "The latest technology [fax/email/listserv/Web/blogs/podcasts] is the next great step in human evolution" article. Then the naysayers come back with "The latest technology is the end of civilization as we know it." Neither writer knows anything about the technology he or she is talking about.

Get over it. Twitter is conversation, nothing more. Take a hand-picked sentence out of your own daily conversation, post it in a three-page rant on AlterNet, and see how intelligent or insightful YOU sound.

Shall we also point out the racism and sexism in this article? Zaitchik's most withering critique is that Twitter users sound like "Japanese schoolgirls"? AlterNet, you can do better than this.

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» ZAITCHIK JUST COULDN'T... Posted by: charlieparisek
Calm down, man, it's not all that bad...
Posted by: jnelson4765 on Feb 21, 2009 4:34 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Twitter is not some secular Antichrist come to steal the souls of the creative and replace them with slack-jawed moron doppelgangers communicating with grunts and moans. It's a public graffiti wall, where you can leave notes to your friends, or see what other people are up to.

Are some people taking it way too far? Yes. Does it require this kind of concentrated vitriol? Is it really a sign of the Idiocracy apocalypse, or is it just IRC done with text messages? IRC can be just as stupid, banal, and far more offensive than anything Twitter puts out, but it's still used by a lot of computer people to coordinate projects and get tech support.

Finally, if you don't like someone's idiotic tweets, WHY ARE YOU FOLLOWING THEM?

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» MY HEARTS A'TWITTER... Posted by: americansheep
» RE: MY HEARTS A'TWITTER... Posted by: Quannah
I think that you missed something
Posted by: andrianmarketing on Feb 21, 2009 4:49 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In all the screaming about who's right and who's wrong I absolutely think that a point has been missed. Yes there are a lot of people who post nothing but mindless drivel, however, Twitter is like anything else, you get out of it what you put into it. I myself have learned a great deal from intelligent people who provide summaries and links to articles that they value and feel that I should value too. If I don't like what they have to say I don't have to read it. But I find at least 5 extremely well written articles every day on topics like politics, science and business. People are sharing their knowledge freely on Twitter with anyone that wants to learn.
Search your favorite topic on Twitter and if you can't find at least 100 people talking about it and linking to more information about it then you can complain, but if you don't use it don't bash it as it has absolutely nothing to do with you. People who bemoan the lack of substance in the world, look at your TV, I've seen more substance linked to on Twitter than in every major Emmy winning Situation Comedy in the last 5 years.
And to the guy who says that SEO doesn't work. Buy a book, SEO works, your methods don't.
Andrian Marketing a florida marketing company.
Follow Me on Twitter

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How is this news?
Posted by: eruditeogre on Feb 21, 2009 4:54 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Wow, Twitter hate must really be in vogue nowadays! This article was complete mush, with little thought and no analysis put into it. Twitter is a method of communication; how people use it is up to them. If you follow morons, you get moronic communications. I follow a handful of friends and artists such as Neil Gaiman, Warren Ellis, and Amanda Palmer, and somehow they can tweet and not be idiots. It is a way to connect to other people; if those people have nothing worth saying, IGNORE THEM.

Short attention span and "look-at-me" culture far predate Twitter; why don't you comment on the soullessness of our society and the need for the power elites to create distractions for us? Twitter could be seen in that light, but to do so requires actual critique, not just snark.

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Editor's Note
Posted by: bornxeyed on Feb 21, 2009 5:14 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Ed. Note -- Twitterers invited to respond to this article in the comments or on AlterNet's Twitter feed.



Twitters invited to respond can do what?

You don't say.

Or does the editor not believe in apostrophes?

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» RE: ditor's Note Posted by: BeckyD
twiiter must seem like a novelette format to texters
Posted by: don_alejandro on Feb 21, 2009 6:04 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I suspect the twitter format seems spacious to a generation used to communicating in text messages. The real problem for society and the future of life on earth is the fragmentation and waste of time and what passes for attention on narcissitic banalities while corporate greed, runaway militarism and religious fundamentalism lead us down the path of doom.

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140 characters
Posted by: paganpat on Feb 21, 2009 6:15 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
After tweeting this article I can now understand why we are limited to 140 characters, The author could have said it in less than 140 characters and even then it would have been too many.

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"din of a giant turd-covered silicon aviary?"
Posted by: Beck on Feb 21, 2009 6:25 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Um, seems like it won't be that different. Just a matter of degree. If all the future social ills being ascribed to twitter are real, well, I have to say that although many ironic things appear here, this is at the top of the irony heap. Twitter is different from sites like alternet only in degree. Anyone completely unfamiliar with either would be hard-pressed to see a big difference. As our society apparently continues to slide downhill (I keep reading that this is true), many of us seem very eager to blame it on all the OTHER activities, not our own.

By the way, I haven't seen Idiocracy, but doesn't it sound like Kurt Vonnegut's short story Harrison Bergeron?

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Why Twitter?
Posted by: curiousdwk on Feb 21, 2009 6:33 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am not anti-computer as I spend my entire days on the computer programming Access database programs, and my evenings corresponding and searching the internet. But I have never seen one person who has benefited from a Twitter to make me want to even try. Just like I've never seen a drunk person that I have envied so I never get drunk, I haven't seen one person use Twitter to make me want to. But then again, I don't even carry around a cell phone for the same reason.

I like myself. I like time to myself to entertain my own thoughts and feelings. I prefer reflection to reaction. When I see benefits of being in a connect mode rather than an introspect mode, I might consider it.

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» RE: Why Twitter? Posted by: Violetw
» RE: Why Twitter? Posted by: clvngodess
» RE: Why Twitter? Posted by: Quannah
Twittering and frittering
Posted by: Celtic Tiger on Feb 21, 2009 7:06 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Brilliant, insightful and hilariously on the mark.
I've sent it to my email lists and will certainly recommend it on my Twitter page so my "followers" will understand when I disconnect.

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Their logo is proof that
Posted by: AMERICAN VETERAN on Feb 21, 2009 7:15 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
it's a birdbrained idea.

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I suppose we should ask you the same question.
Posted by: GuitarBill on Feb 21, 2009 8:25 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]

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Eddie Van Helsing = Honky the Nihilist.
Posted by: GuitarBill on Feb 21, 2009 8:34 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So I understand that you're a big fan of Max Stirner, which you admit in this thread.

Who do you think you're fooling, Honky?

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One more proof people are gainfully occupied
Posted by: wrinklemomma on Feb 21, 2009 7:51 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Don't know how Twitter works, don't care. I am however, depressed at the idea that people (at least some of whom are being paid to do some sort of job) have time in their day to let the whole freaking world know how they feel about using a public restroom, or some othr earthshaking event. By any definition, this IS narcissistic-the whole world should give a damn about my thoughts. Why should I, or anyone, need to tell everything about my life to other people who apparently aren't focused on much either? When future cultures, or aliens visiting the wreckage of earth, find all these "tweets", they will know exactly why we stood in the middle of the street while the speeding truck of real events we didn't see made road pizza out of us.

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Sounds like someone's a technophobe...
Posted by: jgrossnas on Feb 21, 2009 8:02 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I can sympathize. I thought Twitter was a silly waste at first too but if you follow good, smart people there, you can get a lot out of it. I've gotten a lot of news scoops there way before I've heard the info from anywhere else.

And as Alternet knows since they have a Twitter account themselves, it's also good for sharing info about articles (i.e. "here's an interesting article on Alternet about tweetiing: (link)").

Also, you'd be surprised at what someone people can say in 140 characters or less. There's a guy who writes short stories there, another one who shares great quotes, an NYU prof who's a media expert, Sonic Youth giving updates about their upcoming album, Tom Waits, a smart pithy album review site, BBC News updates, tech maven Tim O'Reilly and lots more to discover.

And yes, there is a lot of waste and silly crap there but there's also hilarious stuff, like a cat who calls his owner 'the tormentor,' Darth Vader, Notorious BIG from beyond the grave, Rainn Wilson from The Office. Every now and then, you need that kind of thing...

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'A Lil' Bird told US'
Posted by: Purple Girl on Feb 21, 2009 8:14 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Don't diss Twitter it has apparently lulled Repugs into confessions.
Repugs haven't quite wrapped their minds around the 'Internets' and all those 'Cables'
is there something about the 'Bird' icon which draws them into complacency? Or is it an unconscious desire to sing like Birds...When will 'SongBird' himself venture on, revealing far more about himself than anything else. Come On Mac Recount those days in Vietnam when you had chocolates laid upon your pillow everynight. Or about the last times you had Drinks with your old Protege Binny, what great diggs he's got on Palm Island.Or perhaps an account recalling how you nearly escaped another crash landing while delivery that Anthrax to Saddam in the '80's?Tell US more about what you "know".Sing Birdy Sing!

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61 yr old multi-millionaire twitter
Posted by: Violetw on Feb 21, 2009 8:26 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You really shouldn't use big words if you don't know their meaning, kiddo. You have misused several in your 'twitting about twitter', btw. As for thinking you know what twitter is about, you apparently don't have a following of any merit, since you seem to think you are one of the 'older' twitters, and that most of the twitters are talking about 'squirrels and parks'. Even if some twitters are twitting about squirrels and parks, so what to you? They are not 'talking at' YOU, but to their FRIENDS.

You are not a 'freelance journalist', you are just another blogger. Try living in the real world for a change and get your head out of your dank, smelly ass.

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"Twitter is unique and more dangerous..."
Posted by: Sojourner on Feb 21, 2009 8:30 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You've got to be kidding, right? It sounds more like the one-side of a cell phone conversation one hears in public places. We love to hear ourselves...or in this case, read ourselves.

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To Twitter or to Not
Posted by: Phil Free on Feb 21, 2009 8:42 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I signed up for Twitter in the infancy of the site, and after spending about 5 minutes browsing through some of the messages, I knew right away that I had just wasted 5 minutes that I would never be able to get back. Ninety percent of the site is inane crap and the other ten percent is impossible to find. It seems we as humans are regressing more then progressing in our evolution. Where 140 character messages are the norm rather then the exception. During the recent plane crash into the Hudson in NY, Twitter users were patting themselves on the back on how they broke the story and Twitter was the new main stream media. All I can say is I hope for some cataclysmic event to wipe us all out. Then maybe we can start anew.

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interaction is evolving
Posted by: DrXyzzy on Feb 21, 2009 9:11 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Twitter is an evolutionary step in social networking. It might be history in a couple years, but it is taking us somewhere on the path of global interconnectedness.

Generalization: Most people over 25 don't understand Twitter. Their first reaction on hearing about it is, "why would I ever want that"? People under 25 with a cell phone find it a fun way to stay in touch.

You see the same sort of age barriers going back a decade or two for blogging or email or personal computers. It's like geological strata.

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» RE: interaction is evolving Posted by: phatkhat
» RE: interaction is evolving Posted by: blackie4aces
Twitter Will Not Go Away. Get Used to It. . .
Posted by: SkeeterVT1 on Feb 21, 2009 9:11 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Even I use Twitter now to promote my blog postings. Sorry, Twitter-haters, but much like the CDs that die-hard vinyl LP lovers still hate to this day, Twitter is not going to go away. You're just going have to get used to it and learn to live with it.

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I admit it, I am older than a lot of 'puter addicts...
Posted by: phatkhat on Feb 21, 2009 9:15 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
being over 60. I use email a lot, belong to a number of forums and participate in blogs. But I simply do not "get" social networking.

Like one poster above, I suppose I can see some utility in the sites for advertising purposes, but that is about it. I feel no need for shallow social networks, where people indeed post banalities.

I finally did activate instant messaging when I became a forum moderator, but that is as far down that road as I wish to go. Chatting can be fun, but I can see how your whole life could be sucked up by it, too. Kudos to the poster who talked about being so self-absorbed that we are made into road pizza by reality!

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Twitter, schmitter
Posted by: willymack on Feb 21, 2009 9:38 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Twitter Lincoln's Gettysburg Address if you can. Discuss Freud's revolutionary thoughts about the human psyche on Twitter if you can. The point here is that while it may be amusing, or even edifying in some instances, Twitter has some very severe limitations as a communication venue. Believe it or not, some more important things are happening worldwide, and especially right here at home which require an expanded vocabulary to discuss:
1. The phony "war on terror" is STILL in full swing, and with no end in sight. That's ten BILLION per month of OUR money, EVERY month, being pissed away for a ficticious cause.
2. Criminals in banks and on Wall Street are being rewarded with OUR money for their criminal behavior. Twitter can't touch these or other equally important topics with the comprehensive description and discussion they require. On the other hand, if you enjoy speaking in texting language or teenybopperese, Twitter may just be your cup of tea.

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» RE: Twitter, schmitter Posted by: J4761
The Fact that Karl Rove Uses Twitter...
Posted by: dragonlady620 on Feb 21, 2009 10:06 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...is enough to make me wary about going there.

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What the hell is twitter?
Posted by: iamtribalgecko on Feb 21, 2009 10:23 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Until today I never really heard about it. Now I know and still don't care.

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A thought.
Posted by: monkeywrench on Feb 21, 2009 10:23 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
First we had Haiku
And now blather on Twitter
Our progress reversed

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» Clever! Posted by: BlueTigress
portage@uwyo.edu
Posted by: archives@uwyo.edu on Feb 21, 2009 10:25 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Twitter is nothing more than telegrams without editorial censorship.

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The technology of connectedness
Posted by: MRae on Feb 21, 2009 10:34 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Perhaps the saddest part of the technology-of-connectedness is the LACK of physical and emotional connection between people.

I was struck by the differences in interaction between students at a local university campus. In 2000, you would have seen students and faculty interacting with each other in real life. In 2009, one notices an overwhelming number of individuals in headphones with their iPod or on the phone talking or texting; each is in their own world oblivious to life around them. They are surrounded by flesh and blood, but they touch only plastic.

Is that a bad thing? Not if the plastic of the keyboard is balanced by meaningful interaction and relationships with people and society.

We have ever increasing numbers of young people with depression, suicidal attempts and suicides. Many claim to feel isolated. Perhaps we should think more deeply about how our technology may be contributing to the feeling of isolation.

Remember to take a break, get off the machines, get out and meet with people. Have fun in the "real" world.

Gotta go skiing now!

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The funniest article of the month!
Posted by: Laughinggrrrrrl on Feb 21, 2009 10:56 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I had no idea what twitter was and now I don't even want to see it! This article was so funny I had tears in my eyes. If this writer ever writes a book I will buy it. Put me on your email list! I am still laughing...

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Ur doin it wrong
Posted by: axon on Feb 21, 2009 10:59 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I was skeptical at first. I'm a middle-aged, middle-class white guy. I initially thought Twitter was a gossip engine for teenagers. Turns out it's a trust engine for the creative class.

I was researching a business idea, and interviewed one of the pioneers in the industry. I thanked my contact, and told her I'd like to keep up with what she's doing. She said "Oh just follow me on Twitter." Uh, okay, I guess.

And it was just what I expected. "OMG I can't believe my hair looks like this!!!" "Saw the cutest shoes at Macy's!! " "Having lunch with @bozo." And so forth. I was just about to give up.

And then she posted "Registering for this conference ". I followed the link. It was an important conference in my business, and one I knew nothing about. And it was in two days.

I registered, and went to the conference. In truth, I didn't learn anything about the subject that I didn't already know, but I also saw about 400 people who I never see at the conferences I produce. And that's because I wasn't communicating with them. They're millennials, and they don't respond to the communication channels I was using. For most of these people "email" is just a synonym for "spam".

Since then I've found a lot of value in Twitter. I follow thought leaders in the technologies and industries I'm interested in. I use Twhirl (AIM-based desktop client) to manage and skim the feed. I've learned to pass over the personal asides and trivial updates (except for actual friends or family), and hunt for links. It's been enormously useful to expand my information horizon and keep my finger on the pulse of a rapidly transforming society.

Things I've been alerted to on Twitter include live webcasts from BIL, a barcamp for Marriage Equality, hard-to-find tickets to performances, running commentaries from attendees at Davos, TED, and CES. Following logorrheac correspondents like Guy Kawasaki, Robert Scoble, Jason Calacanis, and others keeps me as up-to-the-minute informed as I've ever been. It's been very useful, and not nearly as annoying as I thought it would be. It's all about where I choose to invest my attention, and I find it very easy to skip the shallow stuff and still pick up on a lot of high-value content.

Twitter is not the harbinger of the apocalypse. That would be Seesmic. :-) Seriously, if you hated Twitter, you'll absolutely melt down over Seesmic.

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» My experience is the same as yours Posted by: Grandma Crabby
» RE: Ur doin it wrong Posted by: Sunfell
» RE: Ur doin it wrong Posted by: alterejo
Am I the only one...
Posted by: nen on Feb 21, 2009 11:17 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
... who read that the Dalai Lama Twitters and wondered how I could subscribe?

Also, I found the comments about the Japanese to be racist.

You know what? Sometimes I just want to read a little blurb about my friends to see that they're still alive and not in the throes of some kind of crisis. Sometimes, I'd rather have that brief connection as opposed to reading a great long Live Journal post containing large paragraphs of information about stuff they did with people I've never met.

I don't think it's any Zen haiku stuff, or collective mind. If you don't understand a Tweet, you can just ignore it. It's short so there's nothing to sift through for relevant information.

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TWITTER
Posted by: pfm on Feb 21, 2009 11:42 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As I read the article I found for me it resonated as "tongue in cheek" perhaps I am the fool. I am not the least bit skilled in Twitter, though I am taking my first initial steps into this new realm. It strikes me at worst it may turn out to be a waste of my time or it may well be the vehicle allowing me to find my "tribe" the jury is still out on this. It strikes me that any format which promotes communication in a format which is open with as much honest disclosure as the person chooses is vital in a representative democracy such as the USA chooses to believe it has. Only those seeking to control the format for conversation & discussion would oppose the use of twitter, I ask what is there to fear, save the truth may truly be revealed...?

Respectfully,

Paul F. Miller
striving to promote sustainable awareness

BLOG SITE NAME ... AUTHENTICALLY WIRED

BLOG SITE ADDRESS ... http://waterman99.wordpress.com/2009

... everyone has the right to clean & accessible water, adequate for the health & well being of the individual & family, and no one shall be deprived of such acess or quality of water due to individual economic circumstances ... Article # 31 - United Nations

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Twitter = IRC in slo-mo?
Posted by: beffie on Feb 21, 2009 12:50 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Remember when the usenet crowd used to look down their noses at the ADD-like IRC crowd? Paragraph = "flooding?"

*yawn*

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Alexander, I LOVE you for speaking some sense here! Twitter is for the birds...
Posted by: coachsappho on Feb 21, 2009 1:54 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thank you for speaking up Alexander! I thought not getting what the big deal w/twitter was about was a sign there was something wrong with me! No, but, seriously, I agree with you 150% - I've tried all of the social networking that is out there and this one is truly 'for the birds'!

Earlier this year I start saying 'enough'! I've joined many social networking systems including Facebook (which, btw, I tried some free ads there without noticeable success). I never dug Myspace (I admit I'm too old for getting it I suppose).

I decided to NOT add on texting to my tech repertoire. Now, I'm pretty tech savvy for a relationship coach/social worker, but I am tired and burnt out from all these email accounts, passwords, websites, blogs to upkeep, phones, phone numbers, login codes, etc. etc.

I drew the line at texting, sexting, etc. i don't need to fall off a curb and break my hip reading a text, i don't need a sexter stalking me and i don't need to crash my car trying to text my friends while driving...no thank u.

Twitter almost reminds me too of the old chat rooms years ago when dozens would go in a room and all hell would break loose. That stuff bored me within minutes.

I like real relationships with real people. I'm sorry to be a 'wet blanket' but things like twitter, second life and even myspace have their limits, as far as i'm concerned. i've seen too many people get addicted to them and mess up their jobs, lives, marriages, etc.

Like everything else, you gotta find a balance AND I fear some of these techy things could lead us right down that path to becoming ROBOTS...do you think robots would laugh at an ass???? ;-)

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Practice What You Preach
Posted by: BigElectricCat on Feb 21, 2009 2:16 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
From the article:

"What was once just a colorful special-needs classroom on the Internet is starting to look like a steel spike aimed at the heart of what remains of our ability to construct and process complete grammatical sentences and thoughts."

A grammatical sentence by definition is correctly formed and therefore complete. You are using a redundancy by including "complete". Ah... Let the self-fulfilling prophecy begin!

I don't really care, just thought that was funny. As far as the article I probably agree, Twitter sounds pretty F-ing stupid. And no, this is not me being a grumpy old man that would have said the same thing about the hula hoop. If people want to twitter or facebook or hula hoop, why the hell would I care? I wouldn't feel any need to comment or criticize. Unless of course MSM clowns were on TV all the time saying that hula hoops were a big part of the future of journalism and bragging about their use of it. In which case some criticism would be justified. As well as an occasional rant by a twitter hater on why it's just a silly fad.

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The only thing NEW about this...
Posted by: Pirate1 on Feb 21, 2009 3:15 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Is that before, just people in your circle of confidantes knew and could choose to expose you as a retard or keep your secret. However, too many today, after a few generations of largess at the expense usually of others' labors and oppression who take the luxury of liesure time as "normal", reveal how vacant they really are only now it's out there for all to see. I shudder to think of the human carnage if some of the predictions of climatic or social disaster come to fruition, simply from people freaking out and running blindly into danger and getting killed or maimed... maybe this is how nature trims the tree.

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Y-2K?
Posted by: GUY FOX on Feb 21, 2009 3:55 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Twitter? Another big threat to fat ass Amerika? What about Y-2K? Eh? Do ewe folks remember that threat? Indeed! While we were worried sick about Y-2k, Bush and his neocon cronies $nuck in the back door and made the mess that we now $uffer.

We suspect there are too many sheep out there who haven't enough to do.

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» RE: Y-2K? Posted by: YogiBear
The Internet is a great feat of human imagination, but...
Posted by: Cathyc on Feb 21, 2009 4:00 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
... it will never replace our natural need for face-to-face communication.

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Fact Check: Status messages evolved from AOL Instant Messenger, not Facebook
Posted by: tstitt on Feb 21, 2009 5:47 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There is general consensus that the original use of "status" messages started with a feature in AOL Instant Messenger that was exploited by college students. Facebook and Facebook status messages came later. As I recall, Twitter evolved separately from a hack that the founders of a company that preceded Twitter used to share status with each other. You may be confusing the fact that, until recently, one could update Twitter and Facebook status messages to be identical.

Twitter, as with most of the recently arrived social media services, generates very high noise levels in non-linear patterns. The same could be said about traditional broadcast media if you tried to watch or listen to all of the channels in a linear or omni-casted format. The key to getting useful signals out of Twitter (and traditional media) is applying filters (or tuning to the right channel) for your interests.

Sounds like you could use some advice on social media clients or filters that would extract meaningful signals and hide all the noise.

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Complaining is always easier
Posted by: tsdiva on Feb 21, 2009 6:55 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What a very long-winded article, with no point other than to complain about a service that does so much for so many.

What I've found from those who do whine about Twitter, is two things: 1)they don't use it so how would they know, and, 2)they use it but are very ignorant about social networking and how to use it to enhance your life, online and off.

I could cherry pick several tweets that would show the exact opposite over what this article saw in twitter. It's always easier to complain about things though then focus on the positive.

I hope anyone who was curious about Twitter doesn't take this article seriously. The uses for it are endless. If you use it smartly.

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This article in less than 140 words?
Posted by: Tombo on Feb 21, 2009 7:25 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I hate twitter. Me scared.

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Prejudiced articles are boring
Posted by: chrisdtime on Feb 22, 2009 3:53 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Here's a tip from a professional editor, Alexander. Articles like this are much more interesting if you challenge your assumptions. I would have loved to have read about you signing up for Twitter despite your misgivings, and following your friends' streams for a week or so. If you felt it made even your friends sound inane, then you've proven your point. Or maybe -- just maybe -- your mind might have been opened a notch.

Without even this basic level of investigation, what you've effectively written is this: "I hate books! Why, I saw this book the other day that was all about poop and pooping! People who read books must be idiots!"

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» RE: Prejudiced articles are boring Posted by: Laughinggrrrrrl
Do we need more Internet and Twitter?
Posted by: bobtr900 on Feb 22, 2009 4:01 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I would say, yes.

Twitter seems nonsensical and without any merit, especially as my nephews use it to communicate with their friends wherein they say nothing of any value to each other. BUT, this is a new mode of communication, and to me it may well prove to be yet undeveloped.

I was an early adopter of the Internet, such as it was back in 1987-88. Wow, it was really crude by today's standards. More than likely Twitter's development will be similar. The 140 words would seem to be a limiting factor. But maybe Twitter has not yet found it's niche. With Twitter, it may be a case of the technology comes first then the really productive apps follow.

I would love to know every time jackass George Bush and his relatives do another stupid and unthinking thing, another self revealing act of stupidity, greed or whatever. If we had this knowledge back in 2000 when he was running for the presidency we might have been able to see the impending dangers, and stopped his presidential train wreck. A lot of human beings would be alive today were Twitter in full use then. Look how far we, "we the people", have come in our ever more sophisticated use of the Internet.

Knowledge and now communication are power. "We the people", the ordinary, everyday, little and powerless people have ever greater amounts of power with our increasingly sophisticated uses of the Internet to share our individual knowledge with each other. As we become even more sophisticated in our use of the Internet we become even more powerful, that is because the behind the scenes powerful owner/operators of our society can no longer hide behind the scenes and manipulate our lives as they used to do.

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does ANYBODY enjoy being ALONE IN THEIR OWN SPACE
Posted by: BlueBerry PickN on Feb 22, 2009 8:37 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
anymore?

seriously:
...a quiet walk in the park...
...a quiet book with some soft music...
...a dinner made for a Loved One...
...a morning doing art, canoeing or gardening...

anything that doesn't have a *constant eportage* of the minutiae of other people's moment-to-moment commentaries?

seriously: when is the last time people just spent time alone & enjoyed it?

if you're not enjoying being alone in your headspace for any significant period of time... are you ever doing your own thinking & personal development? are you ever in the moment?

who are you if you can't spend any time without a constant chatter from talk radio? ...tv? ...Twitter? ...FaceBook? ...TXTMSG? hell, some people can't even walk down a hallway without jabbering on a cellphone... don't even get me started about 'quality time' with a BlackBerry or iPhone junkie...


Is our technology stealing our opportunities for experiencing the goal of Zen practitioners: being in the moments of our existence?




perspective, people.


Perspective.

The Jeff Farias Show: podcast

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"...a colorful special-needs classroom on the Internet..."
Posted by: BradKennedy on Feb 22, 2009 10:11 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Ridiculing Twitter by likening it to a special needs classroom, mocks the important accomplishments made each day in those classrooms and those that achieve them.

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Penny Arcade
Posted by: Mac Geek on Feb 22, 2009 10:45 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Twitter Shitter

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Twitter has its place and shouldn't be feared
Posted by: kwshanno on Feb 22, 2009 11:15 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sure many comments are annoying and trivial, but twitter offers an exciting platform, especially for hyper-local updates. A car accident, an armed robbery, local alcohol officials going from bar to bar to bust people with fake IDs, all these things and more can be broadcast to a wide group of people instantly. The same people who twitter every second of the day are the ones who already do constant facebook status updates, let them have their fun.

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How twue!
Posted by: alterejo on Feb 22, 2009 1:50 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Wasn't the word "twit" used as a pejorative not long ago?

It still is. But by all means, twit away.

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I choose not to twitter
Posted by: YogiBear on Feb 22, 2009 2:04 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Not because I don't like it, but because the messages that appear on Facebook don't sync with Facebook's 3rd person status updates. If YogiBear had a Facebook site, the status updates -- twitterish on their own -- would say: YogiBear is ...

You can remove the is, but you're still speaking in third person. So if you Twitter, it appears on your Facebook page like this: YogiBear is I'm in the park feeding the squirrels.

or

YogiBear Isn't life swell?

I just don't care for the poor grammar.

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The mob mentality -
Posted by: cori on Feb 22, 2009 4:43 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There is an attitude that is being nurtured in our nation that those in need should not be helped by others who are not in need. That we are not a people who take care of others. Are we a nation that believes we are a mob where it is each man for him self and if you don't have enough to survive then you should be left to die in the gutter? Is that what we are? Some are trying to send this message to people- Why should we help others and use our tax dollars to do this? Well this is what Democracy is about. This is what is practiced in Europe with national healthcare and many other services that people get that the entire nation pays into because there is a fundamental idea that the people give so that all can prosper. What they don't realize is that the corporations who are spending trillions of our tax dollars are doing nothing for us or our nation.

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Simply Stupid
Posted by: CV on Feb 22, 2009 5:07 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Twitterers = lemmings. A flock of fools who must join in on the latest "fad." It is, quite simply stupid . . . and fortunately it is easily IGNORED. What a world - people are losing their homes, their jobs and someone offered the founders of Twitter $500 million (or was that billion)! Values? Pshaw - what's a "value"? Oops - I went over 140 - omg

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Alexander Zaitchik has a fun idea!
Posted by: Brice on Feb 22, 2009 7:06 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yay! Let's make fun of people based on our limited view of their culture! Howabout the Japanese....ummmmmzzz.....uhhh...Hello Kitty! Technology! Cute stuff! Wow, they, like, need to grow up like Alexander has! LOLZ!!!

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Don't Worry About Twitter
Posted by: Revolutionary (Direct) Democracy on Feb 22, 2009 7:10 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When our voices get too loud and too threatening the internet will blink off.


FREE AMERICA

REVOLUTIONARY (DIRECT) DEMOCRACY

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Please explain "Twittering"
Posted by: reidhaus on Feb 23, 2009 5:29 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm old (39). Can someone please explain what exactly "twittering" is? Is it like blogging (and I'm not exactly sure what that is, either)?

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Any takers?
Posted by: cllundgren on Feb 23, 2009 6:51 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Who wants to go in with me on a new venture we can call either "Twattle" or "Blather"? It can't lose. No, wait..."Insipia"...that's it!

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140 and the GOP
Posted by: jimswanson on Feb 28, 2009 2:45 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In 2010 let’s reduce the number of GOP Congressmen to 140.

Jim Swanson, Los Altos, CA
“The Bush League of Nations”
www.bushleagueofnations.com [for FREE download of entire $25.95 book]

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seniorita
Posted by: seniorita on Mar 1, 2009 4:54 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
thank you for your thoughts re twitter - have the same opinion of it that you've expressed - it's totally narcicistic - so is facebook, myspace, etc.. - it's a sad commentary on our society when so many people feel the almost obsessive need to communicate with so many other people about essentially unimportant information - don't they have anything more constructive to accomplish? am totally disgusted with professional news groups, print, tv, etc. who encourage this behavior!

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